Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Brunch

Head Cheese - Sylte

Brunch, Christmas, Holiday, Lunch, Meats, PorkTove Balle-PedersenComment
Head Cheese - Sylte

Head Cheese - Sylte

6th Day of Christmas.

Sylte or head cheese as it is called in English is a cold cut danes often eat around christmas time. It might be an old tradition and maybe young people will not carry this tradition on, but if the sylte or head cheese is well made, it is very good. My dad was the one who made the sylte in my house. I loved the homemade version, but the commercial version was to hard, fatty and salty for my taste. Originally the sylte is made from meat from the head of the pig. But it is easier to use more available cuts, such as hocks, loin roast or pork belly.
I made this sylte so I can have this traditional cold cut for my Christmas lunch. 

Makes 2 medium or 3-4 small

Ingredients:

  • 750 g pigskin from the pork belly
  • 1 hock, with skin and bone
  • ½ gallon (2 liter) water
  • 200 ml vinegar
  • 12 bay leaves
  • 3 pounds (1½ kg) pork loin
  • 5 teaspoons (35-40 g) salt
  • 10 peppercorns
  • 4-5 sheets husblas or 8-10 g non-flavored gelatin powder

Directions:

Put water, vinegar, Peppercorns, cubed pigskin and hock in a large pot, bring it to a boil and let it simmer for about 2 hours.  Discard the pigskin. Add the cubed pork loin to the soup, and keep simmering for another 1-1½ hours, until all the meat has fallen of the bone tender.

Remove hock and pork loin, and let it cool for a while, so you can handle it. Strain the soup into a clean pot. 

Soak the husblas in cold water or bloom the gelatin according to package instructions. 

In a large bowl, season the pork loin and the meat from the hock with salt. Pull some of the meat a bit apart. Fill 2-4 loaf pans ¾ up with the meat. 

Melt the husblas/gelatin in the soup and pour it over the meat. Cover the loaf pans and let them rest for about 24 hours in the refrigerator before slicing. 

Eat the head cheese on Danish rye bread topped with mustard and pickled beets.

Enjoy!

December 8th

Brunch, Christmas, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
Æbleskiver, ebelskiver

Æbleskiver, ebelskiver

December 8th.  - Fourth Day of Christmas

Today my maternal grandmother would have turned wow .... 113. The whole family had the tradition to celebrate her Birthday by having Gløgg and Æbleskiver (mulled wine and Ebelskiver) at her place. It was a nice tradition getting the whole family together before the christmas stress set in.

Even though both my grandmother and mom passed away, I always use this day to remember all the good times we had, and send them a lot of love.

Please spread a little love today and enjoy some ebelskiver and mulled wine.

Cheers!

 

 

Sweet Rice Pancakes

Brunch, Desserts, Holiday, ChristmasTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
Sweet Rice Pancakes

Sweet Rice Pancakes

December 3rd.

I hope you all are started to get excited for Christmas. I meant to start my 12 days for Christmas yesterday, but life got in the way. So here is my first post Risklatkager, a great dessert or Sunday afternoon snack.  

Growing up I loved when we had risengrød/Danish rice poridge for dinner. My dad did not like this. I think he got it way to often, maybe because it was a cheap and easy dinner. My mom often asked my brother, what he wanted for dinner, and he had for the most part 3 replies: Risengrød, meatballs and crepes (Danish pancakes). But one thing my dad loved was the desserts my mom made from risengrød, such as risalamande and these sweet rice pancakes. 

Makes 12-16 

Ingredients:

Directions:

Mix the cold porridge with the rest of the ingredients. The consistency of the batter will be rather thick.

Melt butter in a non-stick skillet add about ½ cup (1 dl) batter and fry until golden, then turn the pancake and cook until golden on the other side. Repeat with the rest of the batter.

Serve the pancakes warm with maple syrup and fresh berries.

Enjoy!

Danish Rye Bread - without Sourdough

Bread, Breakfast, Brunch, LunchTove Balle-Pedersen7 Comments
Danish Ryebread

Danish Ryebread

Danes loves their rye bread. Sometimes you just don't have a couple of days to bake your bread, this can be made as a overnight bread.  Mix it in the evening and bake it the next day. If you don't want to keep and take care of a sourdough, this is the way to go.

Ingredients:

Sprinkles:

  • poppy seeds

Directions:

Dissolve the yeast in the liquid in the bowl of the stand mixer. Add the rest of the ingredients, and knead the dough for about 10 minutes.

Pour the dough into a big loaf pan (I use a Eva Professionel rye bread tin, which holds 3.3 liter).

Cover the pan with plastic wrap and place the loaf in the refrigerator to ferment for a minimum of 12 hours up to 48 hours. The longer the bread ferments, the more tart the bread becomes.

Preheat the oven to 350 (180).

Brush the bread with water and sprinkle with poppy seeds. Bake the bread for 90 minutes, remove the bread from the pan, and wrap the loaf in a clean kitchen towel, to cool completely before slicing.

Enjoy!

 

Lemon Curd

Breakfast, Brunch, Spread & DipsTove Balle-PedersenComment
Lemon Curd

Lemon Curd

Lemon Curd is a sweet, tart, soft and velvety spread. Traditionally it is used as a spread for scones for the afternoon tea. But it is a perfect filling in cakes. I've always looked at lemon curd as a thing you buy in a jar in the store. But having the most wonderful lemons in my yard, I had to try to make it myself. Wow, what a flavor!! I will never buy lemon curd ever again. The homemade version is like a party in your mouth. If you know Danish lemon mousse/citronfromage, it's like that, with lemon-steroids. YUM YUM YUM.

Makes about a cup (2-3 dl).

Ingredients:

  • 115 g (1 stick) butter, I use lightly salted butter
  • 170 g sugar
  • 1¼ dl (½ cup) lemon juice, about 3-4 lemons
  • 4 lemons, the zest from
  • 6 egg yolks

Directions:

Melt the butter in a heavy saucepan, be careful not to let it brown. Remove the pan from the heat and whisk in the sugar, lemon juice and zest. Then whisk in the egg yolks until smooth.

Place saucepan over low-medium heat and cook the mixture, whisking constantly, until it thickens. You are looking for the curd to leave a path on the back of a spoon, when a finger is drawn across it. Be careful NOT to let the curd boil, this will cause the egg to curdle.  

Immediately pour the lemon curd into a bowl, to stop the heating. Let the lemon curd cool to room temperature, stirring occasionally. Keep the lemon curd covered and refrigerated until ready to serve.

TIP: Lemon curd keeps for about a month in the refrigerator, not that it has survived this long in my house.